<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049"></SPAN> THE FOX AND THE HORSE </h2>
<p>A farmer had a horse that had been an excellent faithful servant to him:
but he was now grown too old to work; so the farmer would give him nothing
more to eat, and said, ‘I want you no longer, so take yourself off out of
my stable; I shall not take you back again until you are stronger than a
lion.’ Then he opened the door and turned him adrift.</p>
<p>The poor horse was very melancholy, and wandered up and down in the wood,
seeking some little shelter from the cold wind and rain. Presently a fox
met him: ‘What’s the matter, my friend?’ said he, ‘why do you hang down
your head and look so lonely and woe-begone?’ ‘Ah!’ replied the horse,
‘justice and avarice never dwell in one house; my master has forgotten all
that I have done for him so many years, and because I can no longer work
he has turned me adrift, and says unless I become stronger than a lion he
will not take me back again; what chance can I have of that? he knows I
have none, or he would not talk so.’</p>
<p>However, the fox bid him be of good cheer, and said, ‘I will help you; lie
down there, stretch yourself out quite stiff, and pretend to be dead.’ The
horse did as he was told, and the fox went straight to the lion who lived
in a cave close by, and said to him, ‘A little way off lies a dead horse;
come with me and you may make an excellent meal of his carcase.’ The lion
was greatly pleased, and set off immediately; and when they came to the
horse, the fox said, ‘You will not be able to eat him comfortably here;
I’ll tell you what—I will tie you fast to his tail, and then you can
draw him to your den, and eat him at your leisure.’</p>
<p>This advice pleased the lion, so he laid himself down quietly for the fox
to make him fast to the horse. But the fox managed to tie his legs
together and bound all so hard and fast that with all his strength he
could not set himself free. When the work was done, the fox clapped the
horse on the shoulder, and said, ‘Jip! Dobbin! Jip!’ Then up he sprang,
and moved off, dragging the lion behind him. The beast began to roar and
bellow, till all the birds of the wood flew away for fright; but the horse
let him sing on, and made his way quietly over the fields to his master’s
house.</p>
<p>‘Here he is, master,’ said he, ‘I have got the better of him’: and when
the farmer saw his old servant, his heart relented, and he said. ‘Thou
shalt stay in thy stable and be well taken care of.’ And so the poor old
horse had plenty to eat, and lived—till he died.</p>
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